Em qui., 3 de mar. de 2022 às 13:46, Justin Pryzby <pry...@telsasoft.com> escreveu:
> On Thu, Mar 03, 2022 at 01:33:08PM -0300, Ranier Vilela wrote: > > Sorry, but this is much more on the client side. > > The client is reporting the problem, as is the server. > Are you read the server log? " 2022-03-03 01:04:40 EST [21228] LOG: could not receive data from client: An existing connection was forcibly closed by the remote host. 2022-03-03 01:04:40 EST [21228] LOG: unexpected EOF on client connection with an open transaction" > > Following the logs, it is understood that the client is dropping the > > connection. > > The logs show that the client's connection *was* dropped. > And on the server, the same. > No, the log server shows that the client dropped the connection. > > > So most likely the error could be from Pentaho or JDBC. > > > > > https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/java-net-socketexception-in-java-with-examples/ > > " This *SocketException* occurs on the server-side when the client closed > > the socket connection before the response could be returned over the > > socket." > > > > I suggest moving this thread to the Pentaho or JDBC support. > > We don't know the source of the problem. Yeah, but it is much more likely to be on the client. > I still doubt it's in postgres, Everything indicates not. but I > don't think it's helpful to blame the client, just because the client > reported > the problem. If the server were to disconnect abruptly, I'd expect the > client > to report that, too. > > Laurent would just have to start the conversation over (and probably > collect > the same diagnostic information anyway). The client projects could blame > postgres with as much rationale as there is for us to blame the client. > > Please don't add confusion here. I just suggested, this is not an order. regards, Ranier Vilela